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Mozilla Firefox 74 : When a JavaScript URL (javascript:) is evaluated and the result is a string, this string is parsed to create an HTML document, which is then presented. Previously, this document's URL (as reported by the document.location property, for example) was the originating javascript: URL which could lead to spoofing attacks; it is now correctly the URL of the originating document.

Mozilla Firefox 74, Mozilla Firefox ESR 68.6 and Mozilla Thunderbird 68.6 : When a device was changed while a stream was about to be destroyed, the <code>stream-reinit</code> task may have been executed after the stream was destroyed, causing a use-after-free and a potentially exploitable crash.

Mozilla Firefox 74, Mozilla Firefox ESR 68.6 and Mozilla Thunderbird 68.6 : By carefully crafting promise resolutions, it was possible to cause an out-of-bounds read off the end of an array resized during script execution. This could have led to memory corruption and a potentially exploitable crash.

Mozilla Firefox 74, Mozilla Firefox ESR 68.6 and Mozilla Thunderbird 68.6 : When removing data about an origin whose tab was recently closed, a use-after-free could occur in the Quota manager, resulting in a potentially exploitable crash.

The host is installed with Mozilla Firefox 4.x through 8.0 or Thunderbird 5.0 through 8.0 or SeaMonkey before 2.6 and is prone to use-after-free vulnerability. A flaw is present in the applications, which fail to handle nsHTMLSelectElement when the parent node of the element is no longer active. Successful exploitation could allow attackers to run arbitrary code.

Mozilla Thunderbird 68.5 : When processing a message that contains multiple S/MIME signatures, a bug in the MIME processing code caused a null pointer dereference, leading to an unexploitable crash.

Mozilla Thunderbird 68.5 : If a user saved passwords before Thunderbird 60 and then later set a master password, an unencrypted copy of these passwords is still accessible. This is because the older stored password file was not deleted when the data was copied to a new format starting in Thunderbird 60. The new master password is added only on the new file. This could allow the exposure of stored ...

Mozilla Thunderbird 68.5 : When processing an email message with an ill-formed envelope, Thunderbird could read data from a random memory location.

Mozilla Thunderbird 68.5 : When deriving an identifier for an email message, uninitialized memory was used in addition to the message contents.

Mozilla Firefox 73 : Mozilla developers Jason Kratzer, Tyson Smith, and Christian Holler reported memory safety bugs present in Firefox 72. Some of these bugs showed evidence of memory corruption and we presume that with enough effort some of these could have been exploited to run arbitrary code.


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